1. Sitcoms are a lot older than you might think. The very first sitcom that aired in the States started in 1947 and was called Mary Kay and Johnny.
3. The Goldbergs might also be the first TV show that was turned into a film. The movie (which starred the cast from the TV series) was released in 1950.
4. I Love Lucy was a groundbreaking TV series that created much of how the modern TV industry works. One of the things it created was reruns. During the show's second season, CBS decided to rebroadcast some episodes because Lucille needed time off after giving birth. The episodes were rating hits.
5. While the classic heart and satin intro is one of the things we associate most with I Love Lucy, it's actually not the original intro...
...the original intro, as well as the bumpers, were animated. The heart and satin intro was actually created for the show when it went into reruns in 1958.
6. Towards the end of I Love Lucy, Vivian Vance and William Frawley were offered a spin-off of their characters, the Mertzs. However, Vance wasn't interested and turned it down. Reportedly, this angered Frawley, who would never forgive her for it.
7. Lucille Ball also broke new ground in another way in her series after I Love Lucy, The Lucy Show. It featured TV's first primetime divorced character, who was played by Vivian Vance.
9. The Honeymooners is considered a classic TV show. But it only lasted one season — with a total of just 39 episodes. There were various reasons why it was canceled after just one season, one of which was that it aired at the same time as the very popular Perry Como Show.
10. Ricky Nelson (on the right), who starred with his family on The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet, is considered to be TV's first teen heartthrob. His popularity is also why the show ran as long as it did.
11. Ricky also hated the name "Ricky" and later changed it professionally to Rick. But his real name isn't Richard, it's actually Eric.
12. Carl Reiner, who created The Dick Van Dyke Show, originally wrote the show for himself, and it was called Head of the Family. Reiner, who based The Dick Van Dyke Show on his own life as a writer for Your Show of Shows, shot a pilot for it, which had the same characters from the classic series, just with different actors cast as them. The pilot aired but was not a success. However, Sheldon Leonard, who would go on to produce and direct the show, told Reiner he thought that the series could work if someone else played Rob Petrie.
13. Also, The Dick Van Dyke Show was almost The Johnny Carson Show, as he was almost cast as Rob Petrie.
14. In 1963, The Dick Van Dyke Show did something revolutionary (for the time) by portraying a Black couple as middle-class suburbanites.
15. Al Lewis, who played Grandpa on The Munsters, was only 41 when the show premiered. In fact, he was a half a year younger than Yvonne De Carlo, who played his daughter Lily on the show.
16. The Addams Family is based on a comic that ran in the New Yorker. However, it wasn't called The Addams Family, and the characters in the comic didn't have names. The character names were created for the TV show.
17. Both The Addams Family and The Munsters ran for two seasons and during the exact same years (1964–66).
18. Rowlf the Dog was the first Muppet to achieve national fame. In 1963, he was introduced as the side-kick to Jimmy Dean on The Jimmy Dean Show and appeared throughout the show's entire run.
19. The iconic "Meet the Flintstones" theme song wasn't added to the show until its third season. Prior to that, they used an opening theme song that was more of an instrumental jazz tune called "Rise and Shine."
20. Pebbles was originally supposed to be a boy named Fred Jr. However, when executives at the Ideal Toy Company found out about it, they proposed changing the baby to a girl so they could create a doll, and Hanna-Barbera agreed.
21. I think everyone will agree that The Twilight Zone theme song is one of the most iconic and recognizable pieces of music in television history, but it wasn't the original theme song. In Season 1, the theme song was composed by Bernard Herrmann. But CBS executives hated it, so Lud Gluskin, who was the director of music at CBS, hired Romanian-born, Paris-based composer Marius Constant to write him some music cues. Gluskin then took two of those cues and put them together to create the iconic theme song that they would start using during Season 2.
22. Another thing that didn't start until Season 2 was Rod Serling doing an on-camera introduction of that week's episode of The Twilight Zone (which is also one of the most iconic things about the show).
23. All in the Family was the first show to feature the sound of a toilet flushing. Though it was still considered taboo at the time to imply about "bodily functions" in the bathroom, Norman Lear, the show's creator, included the sound of a toilet flushing in the first episode of the show.
24. While Dallas wasn't the first nighttime soap — that would be Peyton Place (which premiered in 1964) — it was the first primetime soap to have serialized storytelling (aka a continuing storyline) and cliffhangers to build anticipation for the next episode, which made it appointment television.
25. The Dallas Season 4 episode, in which it was revealed "Who Shot J.R.?" was the most-watched television show at the time. The episode had a 76 share (aka 76% of US households who were watching TV that night were watching that episode), with an estimated audience of 350 million people worldwide. However, it was all a bit of a happy accident. CBS asked producers to add a few extra episodes to Season 3 because the show was doing well. However, the producers and writers hadn't planned out any more storylines. According to Larry Hagman, who played J.R. Ewing, the producers said, "Let's just shoot the SOB and figure it out later." So, Season 3 ended with a cliffhanger of J.R. being shot and nobody, including the producers, knowing who did it.
26. Cheers is considered one of the best TV shows ever, but it was almost canceled during its first season. When it premiered, it ranked 77th out of 100 shows. Despite the low ratings, NBC executives believed in the show. It also got rave reviews from critics. Cheers would climb a bit in the ratings (into the 40s) because of word of mouth. However, the show really took off during summer reruns, where it faced no competition. The series would also go on to win the Primetime Emmy for Outstanding Comedy Series in its first season, which boosted its visibility even more.
27. The idea for a show revolving around older women came about after network executives watched Doris Roberts and Selma Diamond do a skit at the NBC upfronts.
Shortly before her death, Doris even tweeted about it:
Touchstone Television/courtesy Everett Collection / Via x.com